The week's essential arts news in one newsletter, including a photographic portfolio of five L.A. artists and Patti Lupone's basement tours.
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[Los Angeles Times]
Essential Arts
April 4, 2020
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Hello from the quarantine! Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, staff writer at the Los Angeles Times, with your weekly dose of arts news and apocalypse looks. (Hint: Weâre all about velvet.)
Essential image
[âFoot Scan,â an embroidery by Sula Bermúdez-Silverman, from her solo show at CAAM]
âFoot Scan,â 2014, an embroidery by Sula Bermúdez-Silverman, from her solo show at the California African American Museum. (Sara Bermúdez-Silverman)
Each week, Iâm kicking off the newsletter with work by an artist whose show was closed due to the pandemic. This week, the work on view is by Sula Bermúdez-Silverman, who opened her first solo museum show in Los Angeles at the California African American Museum in late February, only to have it shuttered two weeks later.
Bermúdez-Silverman takes aspects of identity and turns them into art: transforming her familyâs genetic data into colorful pie charts and embroidering vintage doilies with her own hair. The embroidered pieces feature words and objects, like the foot, above, which caught my attention when it came across my desk, for the ways in which it transforms mundane materials and gives them punch.
Catch a video of the artist talking about her work on [CAAMâs website](.
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In the studio with L.A. artists
Or more like, outside the studio with artists. Times photographer Jay L. Clendenin and I teamed up to create [a socially distant photographic portfolio]( that captures five L.A. artists at this moment in time. Sandy Rodriguez, Devon Tsuno, Monica Majoli and Tanya Aguiñiga very generously allowed us onto their driveways and into their backyards. And performance artist Ron Athey showed up rocking a velvet gown â mainly because he doesnât want to die in his pajamas: âIâll be looping in eternity in a bad look.â
[Ron Athey on the Micheltorena steps in Silver Lake]
Ron Athey on the Micheltorena steps in Silver Lake. (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
Art of corona
The good news first: In the middle of the epidemic, artists are finding countless ways to make work and lift spirits.
The Timesâ Jessica Gelt reports that artist Alan Nakagawa is putting out [an open call for haikus about coronavirus]( for a project that he will release in collaboration with the Orange County Museum of Art late next month.
Noted art photographers, including Catherine Opie, Stephen Shore and Todd Hido, are [posting images of their quarantine experiences]( to Instagram.
The Geffen Playhouse is launching [a series of original short performances]( titled âGeffen Stayhouse,â reports The Timesâ Ashley Lee. These will be posted to its website and various social media channels every Wednesday and will feature fresh work by performers such as Jefferson Mays, Lauren Patten and Julia Sweeney.
In the meantime, Skylight Theatre has kicked off [a series of online plays]( that are staged from various locations and streamed live. âActors need to act, writers need to write, directors need to direct, and theaters need to keep doing what we do,â Gary Grossman, the theaterâs producing artistic director, tells Lee.
Times theater critic Charles McNulty is smitten with Patti LuPoneâs social media [dispatches from her basement]( which he describes as âU.S.O. care packages for show queens suffering from musical comedy withdrawals.â
[Patti LuPone at a rehearsal for the L.A. Opera.]
Patti LuPone at a rehearsal in Los Angeles in 1997. (Robert Lachman / Los Angeles Times)
Times classical music critic Mark Swed has been wading through [a bevy of online musical offerings]( including a performance of Schumannâs Fantasy by Jeffrey Kahane, Zubin Mehta remotely conducting three Italian tenors in their home country, and the violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter, who has tested positive for the virus, performing a slow movement of Beethovenâs âHarpâ with three string players in other locations. âThe Germans have long had a word for it,â he writes. âHausmusik, which is exactly what the term sounds like.â
He also reviews the video version of âSweet Land,â by the Industry, which is now available to [view on demand for $14.99](. âIt is the single best deal in all of opera right now,â Swed writes, âand that is taking into account the sudden riches of free opera streams from the worldâs most illustrious companies.â
For Sean Griffin, who runs the avant-garde company Opera Povera, it began as [a random idea posted to social media](. Now more than 250 artists from around the world are gathering to perform a Pauline Ontiveros opera online on Tuesday evening. Money raised will go to grants for U.S. musicians whose gigs were canceled by the pandemic.
Iâve been finding myself gravitating to dance videos as of late â something about music and movement without words seems really appealing at this moment. That includes [the ebullient videos]( shared by Tony-award winning actor Robbie Fairchild (who used to dance with the New York City Ballet) and his roommate Chris Jarosz, an independent dancer and choreographer, as well [this wonderful socially distant choreography]( from the Martha Graham Dance Company.
You can support the Martha Graham dancers through [their relief fund](.
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Corona and the arts
Now the bad news: the COVID-19 pandemic continues to pummel the arts and artists economically.
The Timesâ Makeda Easter looks at how the cancellation of concerts, shoots and events has hit hard [among independent choreographers and commercial dancers]( contract workers who often donât have benefits of any kind to fall back on. âItâs the new reality for L.A.'s commercial dance world,â writes Easter, âan already exclusive and fragile industry.â
[Kaileigh Williams of North Hollywood selects a meal from Everytable during a meal giveaway at KreativMndz Dance Academy.]
Kaileigh Williams of North Hollywood selects a meal from Everytable during a meal giveaway at KreativMndz Dance Academy. (Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times)
The Center Theatre Group [has suspended all shows until the fall]( and furloughed about half of its staff through early August. Furloughed employees will continue to receive benefits and remaining staff will face paycuts. Coronavirus has been brutal for theaters: ticket sales account for more than 75% of the Center Theatre Groupâs annual revenue.
The Museum of Contemporary Art [furloughed and instituted paycuts for most of the staff](. About half of full-time employees were furloughed, reports The Timesâ Deborah Vankin. And director Klaus Biesenbach is taking a large pay cut. In an email, Biesenbach described the situation as a âslow-burning catastrophe.â
MOCAâs employee union has launched [a relief fund]( for workers who have lost their jobs.
In addition, the Annenberg Space for Photography in Century City has [laid off eight staffers]( including seven full-time employees and one temp.
Andrew J. Campa looks at what the pandemic might mean for [small L.A. institutions]( like the Altadena Bunny Museum and the Valley Relics Museum. âWe have no revenue coming in, no endowment to dip into,â says Kori Capaldi, executive director of the historical Heritage Square Museum in Montecito Heights.
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In the Bay Area, the Exploratorium [cut hours, laid off part-time workers]( and implemented furloughs and paycuts. And the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art is [laying off or furloughing more than 300 workers](. In addition, director Neal Benezra and other members of management will take pay cuts.
âWe have been fortunate to be able to keep our staff on full compensation for seven weeks after we closed,â wrote Benezra in a statement, âbut we now have to look to the future and make the painful decision to temporarily decrease the size of our team.â
[The San Francisco Museum of Art in April 2016]
SFMOMA was among countless institutions around the country laying off workers and implementing furloughs. (Josh Edelson / AFP/Getty Images)
In New York City, the Whitney Museum [laid off 76 employees](. Plus, senior staff, including director Adam Weinberg, will be taking a pay cut. Weinberg said he anticipates a shortfall of at least $7 million by the end of the fiscal year.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, in the meantime, will [extend staff pay until May 2](. Originally, they were only going to guarantee salary payments through April 4. The museum is exploring the possibility of temporarily dipping into its endowment to get it through the pandemic.
Art + Museum Transparency has been keeping track of museum layoffs around the country in a long (and growing longer) [Twitter thread](.
Some needed relief
Numerous organizations have begun to spring into action to help offer relief to artists and organizations.
The J. Paul Getty Trust created [a $10 million COVID-19 relief fund]( for visual arts organizations based in L.A. County. As part of this, the CCF Fellowship for the Visual Arts grant will this year be repurposed as an emergency support grant for artists.
The Warhol Foundation is offering $1.6 million in emergency grants to [artists in 16 U.S. cities]( while the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation is [committing $5 million for crisis relief]( including individual artist grants and support to organizations while they are closed.
Anonymous Was a Woman has announced [$250,000 in emergency grants for female artists over 40 in the U.S.]( and L.A.'s Womenâs Center for Creative Work is offering [emergency COVID-19 health grants]( for low-income artists living in four Southern California counties.
My colleague Anousha Sakoui has [a great round-up]( of organizations assisting performers and other workers in various areas of the entertainment industry. And Makeda Easter comes through with [a list of resources]( for those in the fine arts.
The next museums
Sunday Calendar gives us a glimpse of how two rising museums will transform the cultural landscape of Los Angeles â changes that were underway before the coronavirus outbreak and will provide new places to explore once the pandemic is long behind us.
The half-built structure near the L.A. Memorial Coliseum might resemble a âdamaged Millennium Falcon undergoing repairs,â writes architecture contributor Sam Lubell. But itâs actually the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art by architect Ma Yansong, founder of the firm MAD. Lubell [profiles the architect]( a man of few words who likens his museum structure to a shapeless cloud. His work isnât always a hit, however. Chicago Tribune architecture critic Blair Kamin once likened the architectâs proposal for a Lucas museum in Chicago as âa giant lump.â
But as this [gallery of 11 buildings]( by the architectâs MAD firm, those lumps are mysterious and intriguing. Lubell says that Ma, like Lucas, âchannel a poetic past and a visionary future for inspiration.â
[A rendering of Ma Yansongâs design for the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art at Exposition Park. ]
A rendering of Ma Yansongâs design for the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art at Exposition Park. (Lucas Museum of Narrative Art )
Also rising next to the the much-debated construction happening at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, is the Renzo Piano-designed Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, which is still set to open in December. Times culture writer Deborah Vankin sat down with museum director Bill Kramer and got a preview of [what visitors will see inside the galleries](.
[The exterior of the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on Feb. 7, 2020]
The rising Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on Feb. 7, 2020. (Al Seib / Los Angeles Times)
See you at the movies
Times film critic Kenneth Turan is retiring. When our newspaperâs offices were still located in downtown L.A., I had the good fortune of sitting next to Kenny, as he was known in the newsroom, and I couldnât have had a better cubicle-mate: He was perpetually good natured, and we regularly shared taco lunches.
My colleague Justin Chang [pays tribute to an incredible career](. And Kenny leaves us with his list of [14 films that will offer some psychological balm]( during these troubled times. âBecause being useful as a critic ... has always been one of my guiding principles,â he writes, âit feels especially fitting that my final piece is not ruminative or filled with reminiscences but very much in that pragmatic spirit.â
Time to get watching.
Best arts online
Matt Cooper has been blazing the keyboards to keep us up-to-date on the best culture to view while social distancing. This includes Margaret Batjer of the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra [playing solo pieces by Bach]( on violin, [a musical farce]( courtesy of Londonâs National Theatre and [a new audio release]( of Bizetâs âCarmenâ by L.A. Opera.
Find Cooperâs listings on The Timesâ [Things To Do: Arts & Culture]( page on a daily basis.
Bonus: The Times has put together a guide to [everything there is to do on the internet](. So. Much. Content.
In my little neck of the internet woods, Iâd like to recommend Kimberly Drewâs [new newsletter]( Something I Saw. Each day, she emails you a single work of art with a related story. Informative and enjoyable. There are free and subscriber versions.
Passages
Gerald Freedman, the director behind countless works of theater, including the original âHair,â has [died at the age of 92]( of kidney failure.
David C. Driskell, whose 1976 exhibition at LACMA, âTwo Centuries of Black American Art: 1750-1955,â helped break ground in the scholarship of African American art, [has died at 88](.
In the news
â The California Historical Society has been doing some great historical posts during this time, such as [this interesting piece]( about an improvised bubonic plague hospital at a San Francisco racetrack in the early days of the 20th century.
â The Autry Museum of the American West has [donated its stock of personal protection equipment]( to L.A. hospitals.
â Writer Matt Stromberg and curator J. Patrice Marandel [sound off]( on the LACMA building plan.
â Karrie Jacobs takes on the (now-shuttered) Rem Koolhaas show at the Guggenheim: âWhile it is encyclopedic in its aspirations, [it is Wikipedic in its execution](
â Gia Kourlas on how the pandemic has [affected the choreography of everyday life](.
â The Getty Museum put out a call on social media asking people to remake famous artworks using household items and the results are [clever and adorbz](. See the full Twitter thread [here](.
â Taylor Lorenz says [you donât have to be productive]( during a pandemic. Whew.
And last but not least ...
A [disaster dégustation]( I write about five disaster movies and the meals to go with them â with special appearances by alien contagions, Cuban zombies and Kraft mac and cheese.
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